Literary usage of Suborder Homoptera

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1.The Insect Book: A Popular Account of the Bees, Wasps, Ants, Grasshoppers by Leland Ossian Howard (1901)"... suborder Homoptera A curious and important assemblage of insects belong to
the Homoptera. Those creatures which we know as leaf-hoppers, tree-hoppers, ..."

2.Biennial Report by California Dept. of Agriculture, California State Commission of Horticulture (1907)"When winged, their wings differ from the suborder Homoptera in the composition
and position of the wing covers and in the direction of the head. ..."

4.A Manual for the Study of Insects by John Henry Comstock, Anna Botsford Comstock (1895)"... cattle are in the habit of rubbing should also be whitewashed or sprayed with
kerosene, or strong kerosene emulsion. Suborder HoMOPTERA (Ho-mop'te-ra). ..."

5.Guide to the Study of Insects and a Treatise on Those Injurious and by Alpheus Spring Packard (1878)"I. Ih'iia! (checks) hollowed out, to receive the first pair of coxae. [Posterior
pair of coxa; hinged, provided with femoral grooves.] Suborder HOMOPTERA. ..."

6.Insects Injurious to Vegetables by Frank Hurlbut Chittenden (1907)"suborder Homoptera.—In this group the wings are of uniform thickness and usually
slope at the sides of the body, the beak arising from the hinder portion of ..."